Casey Anthony has reached a settlement in her civil case involving Texas Equusearch, the search-and-rescue group that came to Orlando in 2008 to help search for Anthony's then-missing daughter, Caylee.

Stephen Meininger, the trustee in Anthony's bankruptcy case in Tampa, confirmed the agreement Monday.

Court documents showed Anthony and Equusearch settled Friday, with the search group getting an unsecured claim of $75,000.

Collecting it, however, will be tough, since bankruptcy creditors typically receive little or nothing.

Texas Equusearch originally objected to the bankruptcy, claiming it had spent more than $100,000 searching for 2-year-old Caylee in 2008.

The group's founder, Tim Miller, sued Anthony shortly after she was acquitted of murder in 2011. Miller said based on Anthony's defense in her murder trial, Equusearch's efforts to find Caylee started after Casey knew her daughter was dead.

By settling, Texas Equusearch will not be entitled to any other claims against Anthony.

Casey still faces defamation lawsuits against Zenaida Gonzalez, who shares a name with a made-up nanny Anthony initially claimed kidnapped Caylee; and Roy Kronk, the meter reader who found the toddler's remains. He says he was defamed when Anthony's defense team made false statements during her murder trial, including that Kronk killed Caylee and moved the remains to the woods near Anthony's home.